Grantmakers in the Arts Racial Equity in Arts Funding Workshop

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Grantmakers in the Arts Racial Equity in Arts Funding Workshop
Racial Equity in Arts Funding

                                         Grantmakers in the Arts
                 Racial Equity in Arts Funding Workshop
                                               February 2022
 Grantmakers in the Arts has partnered with Race Forward and True North EDI to develop the Racial
 Equity in Arts Funding Workshop, which we premiered at the 2017 GIA Annual Conference. GIA has
  been hosting the workshop for grantmakers since 2017 to overwhelmingly positive feedback. GIA
continues to offer racial equity workshops as a way to support funders with nuts-and-bolts guidance
on how to better serve African, Latinx, Asian, Arab, Native American (ALAANA) communities through
   their grantmaking. This workshop will include information on the history of racialization in the
   United States, the history of cultural funding, and real-world examples of racial equity funding,
            strategies, and resources you may bring with you back to your organizations.

              Be sure to follow us on Twitter at @GIArts, on Facebook at @GIArts, and on
                Instagram @grantmakersinthearts, and join the conversation using the
                        hashtags #GIARacialEquity and #GIAVirtualWorkshops.
Grantmakers in the Arts Racial Equity in Arts Funding Workshop
Agenda

                                        February 2, 2022
10:30am - 1pm PST/1:30 - 4:30pm EST                               https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83566870454

                 Module 1: KEY CONCEPTS OF RACE, RACISM, ANTI-RACISM
                       Understand key concepts related to structural racism

            10:30am PST / 1:30pm EST:    Introductions and establishing context

            11:00am PST / 2:00pm EST:    Why lead with race?

            11:30am PST / 2:30pm EST:    Barriers to talking about race

                                         Key concepts related to race
            12:30am PST / 3:30pm EST:    Use Race Forward’s Systems Analysis: Understanding
                                         Racism in Your Organization

             1:15pm PST / 4:15pm EST:    Wrap-up and assignments for next module

Review:

 •   Donella Meadows’ Leverage Points: Places to Intervene in a System

                                         February 9, 2022
10:30am - 1pm PST/1:30 - 4:30pm EST                               https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83566870454

          Module 2: CULTURE, DOMINANT CULTURE, & RACISM IN ARTS FUNDING

           10:30am PST / 1:30pm EST:     Introductions and establishing context

           10:45am PST / 1:45pm EST:     Culture, the brain, & implicit bias

           11:00am PST / 2:00pm EST:     How culture is weaponized

           12:10pm PST / 3:10pm EST:     Racial Equity in Arts Funding

           12:30pm PST / 3:30pm EST:     Lay It On The Line activity

                                         Marcus Walton, president & CEO,
             1:00pm PST / 4:00pm EST:
                                         Grantmakers for Effective Organizations

             1:15pm PST / 4:15pm EST:    Wrap-up and assignments for next module

Review:

 •   GIA’s Racial Equity Case Studies to review prior to next module
Grantmakers in the Arts Racial Equity in Arts Funding Workshop
February 16, 2022
10:30am - 1pm PST/1:30 - 4:30pm EST                               https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83566870454

                Module 3: IMAGINING THE ARTS FUNDING SECTOR WE WANT

            10:30am PST / 1:30pm EST:   Introductions and establishing context

                                        GIA Racial Equity case studies
                                        •   Randy Engstrom, former Director of the Office of Arts
            11:10am PST / 2:10pm EST:       and Culture, City of Seattle
                                        •   Kerry McCarthy, Vice President for Philanthropic Initiatives;
                                            Salem Tsegaye, Program Officer, Arts & Culture, New York
                                            Community Trust

           12:10pm PST / 3:10pm EST:    Peer-to-peer discussions

           12:45pm PST / 3:45pm EST:    What can we apply to our own work?

             1:15pm PST / 4:15pm EST:   Wrap up

                                        February 23, 2022
10:30am - 1pm PST/1:30 - 4:30pm EST                               https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83566870454

               Module 4: IMAGINING THE ARTS FUNDING SECTOR WE WANT II

            10:30am PST / 1:30pm EST:   Introductions and establishing context

            11:00am PST / 2:00pm EST:   Review of past content

                                        What do I need to remind myself to do before I engage each
            11:20am PST / 2:20pm EST:   element of my grantmaking? What have I learned that will
                                        help me to do it?

           12:15pm PST / 3:15pm EST:    Racial Equity primes & Racial Equity commitments to ourselves

           12:15pm PST / 3:15pm EST:    Wrap up
Grantmakers in the Arts Racial Equity in Arts Funding Workshop
Workshop Facilitators
Jonny Altrogge
Facilitator, True North EDI

                    Jonny Altrogge is originally from the Pittsburgh area but has lived and worked in New York City for nearly
                    10 years. In addition to his work around Diversity, Equity, and Interdependent consulting and facilitating he is
                    a school coach for the NYC public school system. Outside of work Jonny loves all things outdoor-related, and
                    is a musician who previously performed in small venues around the city. Jonny is passionate about continuing
                    his own learning as well as guiding and supporting others on their journey towards understanding what
                    justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion mean in our ever-evolving world and communities. Jonny believes that
                    organizational advancement and achievement begins with understanding the self, and reflecting and focusing
                    on ways in which we can grow as individuals.

Nadia Elokdah
Vice President & Director of Programs, Grantmakers in the Arts

                    Nadia Elokdah is an urbanist, designer, and cultural producer. She currently serves as deputy director and
                    director of programs for Grantmakers in the Arts. Most recently she served as special projects manager with
                    the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, and she coordinated and co-authored the City’s Monuments
                    Commission and CreateNYC, the first-ever comprehensive cultural plan for NYC in 2017. In this role, she
                    coordinated and led hundreds of engagements with a broad cross-section of the peoples, communities, and
                    stakeholders city-wide. Elokdah is a trained architect and design strategist, researcher, professor, and
                    published author. She holds a Master of Arts in Theories of Urban Practice from Parsons The New School for
                    Design and a Bachelors of Architecture from Temple University.

Sherylynn Sealy
Senior Program Manager, Grantmakers in the Arts

                      Sherylynn Sealy is a strategist, artist, yoga instructor, and educator with a varied background. Prior to her role
                      with Grantmakers in the Arts, Sealy was a philanthropy fellow with The New York Community Trust where
                      she engaged with arts and culture funders and organizations across New York City. She previously served as
                      a consultant for the New Haven Mayor’s Office and Superintendent’s Office on their implementation of the
                      city-wide Youth Stat Initiative. Managing over 200 student-cases, she served as the point of contact for schools
                      and local partners. She served on the Dance/NYC Junior Committee and is the producing artistic director
                      at Greater Glory Nazarene Ministries in Brooklyn, NY. She continues to explore her passion for performing
                      arts, traveling, and spreading a message of hope. She holds a Masters of Public Administration in Public and
Nonprofit Management and Policy from New York University, Bachelors of Science in Education and Psychology from Northeastern
University, and is a Teach for America alumna.

Edwin Torres
President & CEO, Grantmakers in the Arts

                  Edwin Torres joined Grantmakers in the Arts as president & CEO in October 2017. Torres served on the GIA
                  board of directors from 2011 through 2016. He most recently served as deputy commissioner of cultural affairs
                  for New York City, where he collaborated on the development of the city’s long-term sustainability plan, a
                  study of and efforts to support the diversity of the city’s cultural organizations and the city’s first cultural
                  plan. Prior to joining the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs, he was a program officer with The Rockefeller
                  Foundation, where he worked on the foundation’s support for arts and culture, jobs access, and resilience.
                  He has also served in the dean’s office at Parsons the New School for Design, on the arts and culture team at
                  The Ford Foundation as well as on the staff of the Bronx Council on the Arts. He holds a Master of Arts in Art
History from Hunter College and a Master of Science in Management from The New School.
Grantmakers in the Arts Racial Equity in Arts Funding Workshop
Guest Facilitators
Randy Engstrom
Former Director of the Office of Arts and Culture, City of Seattle

                   Randy Engstrom has been a passionate advocate and organizer of cultural and community development
                   for over 15 years. He is currently an Adjunct Faculty at the Seattle University Arts Leadership Program and
                   an independent consultant focused on cultural policy, organizational development and racial equity. Most
                   recently he served as Director of the Office of Arts and Culture for the City of Seattle where he expanded
                   their investments in granting programs and Public Art, while establishing new programs and policies in arts
                   education, cultural space affordability, and racial equity. He served as Chair of the Seattle Arts Commission
                   in 2011 after serving two years as Vice-Chair, and was Chair of the Facilities and Economic Development
                   Committee from 2006 to 2010. Previously he served as the Founding Director of the Youngstown Cultural Arts
                   Center, a multimedia/multidisciplinary community space that offers youth and community member’s access to
                   arts, technology, and cultural resources.

Kerry McCarthy
Vice President for Philanthropic Initiatives, New York Community Trust

                   Kerry McCarthy designs donor services to make best use of the expertise in New York Community Trust’s
                   competitive grants program. She is co-chair of The Trust’s Mosaic Network and Fund. She also is on the
                   board of the Billie Holiday Theatre; a member of the City Department of Education’s arts education
                   committee; and the former vice chair of Grantmakers in the Arts. Kerry has a B.A. from Sewanee: The
                   University of the South, and an M.A. in Folk Art Studies from New York University.

Salem Tsegaye
Program Officer, Arts & Culture, New York Community Trust

                   Salem Tsegaye oversees grantmaking in arts, culture, and historic preservation at New York Community
                   Trust, where she also manages the Mosaic Learning Network and Fund. Tsegaye’s past roles at New York
                   Community Trust also include program associate and senior program associate. Tsegaye has served as
                   assistant director for the Arts Research Institute, Virginia Commonwealth University. Tsegaye has also served
                   on the editorial team for Createquity. Tsegaye holds a B.A. from Duke University and an M.A. from Parsons
                   The New School for Design.

Marcus Walton
President & CEO, Grantmakers for Effective Organizations

                    Marcus F. Walton joins GEO with over a decade of practice in both nonprofit management and the ontological
                    learning model. He specializes in operationalizing conceptual frameworks; racial equity facilitation and
                    training; leadership and management strategy; stakeholder engagement; program development and
                    navigating philanthropy. In his previous role as Director of Racial Equity Initiatives for Borealis Philanthropy,
                    Marcus lead the Racial Equity Initiatives team and worked in partnership with 18 nationally-networked,
                    philanthropy-serving grantee organizations to move past the “transactional” nature of Diversity, Equity and
                    Inclusion to a unified movement which prioritizes strategies that close gaps in access to opportunity, resources
                    and well-being (across all categories of gender, identity, sexual orientation, class and ability). Before that,
                    Marcus served as Vice President and Chief Operating Officer for the Association of Black Foundation Executives
(ABFE), where he oversaw its operations, HR and staff development functions, including the overall strategy, conceptualization and
administration of racial equity programming. Prior to ABFE, he combined his organizing experience and passion for public service
in the role of Program Officer of Community Responsive Grantmaking with the Cleveland Foundation and Sr. Program Officer
with Neighborhood Progress, Inc. Marcus is a Newfield Network-trained ontological coach, with additional training in the Action
Learning systems coaching model.
Grantmakers in the Arts Racial Equity in Arts Funding Workshop
Terms & Definitions

                                              Acculturation
A change in the cultural behavior and thinking of a person or group of people through contact
with another culture.

                                                    Ally
Someone from a dominant group (someone who experiences unearned privilege and/or power) who
works with and/or acts in support of non-dominant group members, or someone who is united with
another for a common cause.

Allies take action, reflect on their own thinking and beliefs, seek out learning opportunities, and take
initiative in interpersonal relations. (IISC) Someone who makes the commitment and effort to recognize
their privilege (based on gender, class, race, sexual identity, etc.) and work in solidarity with oppressed
groups in the struggle for justice. Allies understand that it is in their own interest to end all forms of
oppression, even those from which they may benefit in concrete ways.

Allies commit to reducing their own complicity or collusion in oppression of those groups and invest
in strengthening their own knowledge and awareness of oppression.

                                               Assimilation
“The process in which one group takes on the cultural and other traits of a larger group.” In the United
States, the “melting pot” was a popular metaphor used to describe the expectation that 18th and 19th
century European immigrant groups would assimilate into “American” culture rather than maintain an
ethnic distinct identity.

                                                  Bigotry
Intolerant prejudice that glorifies one’s own group and denigrates members of other groups.

                                                   Class
Relative social status based on income, wealth, race, power, position, occupation, and education.

                                                 Collusion
When people act to perpetuate oppression or prevent others from working to eliminate oppression.
Example: Able-bodied people who object to strategies for making buildings accessible because of the
expense.

                                               Colonialism
Colonization can be defined as some form of invasion, dispossession, and subjugation of a people.
The invasion need not be military; it can begin—or continue—as geographical intrusion in the form
of agricultural, urban, or industrial encroachments. The result of such incursion is the dispossession of
vast amounts of lands from the original inhabitants. This is often legalized after the fact. The long-term
result of such massive dispossession is institutionalized inequality. The colonizer/colonized relationship is
by nature an unequal one that benefits the colonizer at the expense of the colonized.
Grantmakers in the Arts Racial Equity in Arts Funding Workshop
Critical Race Theory
The Critical Race Theory movement considers many of the same issues that conventional civil rights and
ethnic studies take up, but places them in a broader perspective that includes economics, history, and
even feelings and the unconscious. Unlike traditional civil rights, which embraces incrementalism and
step by step progress, critical race theory questions the very foundations of the liberal order, including
equality theory, legal reasoning, Enlightenment rationalism and principles of constitutional law.

                                        Cultural Appropriation
Theft of cultural elements for one’s own use, commodification, or profit — including symbols, art,
language, customs, etc. — often without understanding, acknowledgement, or respect for its value in
the original culture. Results from the assumption of a dominant (i.e. white) culture’s right to take other
cultural elements.

                                         Cultural Competence
a set of congruent behaviors, knowledge, will, and skills that enable just and effective work in
multicultural settings. Cultural competency is never fully achieved but is an ongoing process.

Cultural competency can be developed by individuals, organizations, communities and beyond.
Individuals develop their cultural competency by building knowledge, values, skills, and will that
help them to:

 •   develop self-awareness and an understanding of one’s own culture(s);
 •   understand and appreciate other cultures;
 •   facilitate understanding among people of different cultures;
 •   confront inconsistencies, biases and unconscious assumptions of cultures; and,
 •   take action to ensure fairness and access and correct for the results of historic inequities.

Organizations develop their cultural competency by building the knowledge, values, skills, and will of
individuals; and, by building equitable, accessible and inclusive organizational culture, expectations,
policies, structures, systems and processes. (adapted from Garth Ham, Alliance for Nonprofit
Management)

                                            Cultural Racism
Cultural racism refers to representations, messages, and stories conveying the idea that behaviors and
values associated with white people or “whiteness” are automatically “better” or more “normal” than
those associated with other racially defined groups. Cultural racism shows up in advertising, movies,
history books, definitions of patriotism, and in policies and laws.

Cultural racism is also a powerful force in maintaining systems of internalized supremacy and
internalized racism. It does that by influencing collective beliefs about what constitutes appropriate
behavior, what is seen as beautiful, and the value placed on various forms of expression. All of these
cultural norms and values in the U.S. have explicitly or implicitly racialized ideals and assumptions (for
example, what “nude” means as a color, which facial features and body types are considered beautiful,
which child-rearing practices are considered appropriate.)

                                       Cultural White Privilege
A set of dominant cultural assumptions about what is good, normal, or appropriate that reflects
Western European white world views and dismisses or demonizes other world views.
Grantmakers in the Arts Racial Equity in Arts Funding Workshop
Culture
The values, beliefs, arts, customs, and languages that a group of people have discovered, invented,
developed or inherited to address internal and external needs, and that comprise a way of life that can
be taught, learned, reproduced, transformed, and passed on.

A social system of meaning and custom that is developed by a group of people to assure its adaptation
and survival. These groups are distinguished by a set of unspoken rules that shape values, beliefs, habits,
patterns of thinking, behaviors, and styles of communication.

                                                   Diaspora
The voluntary or forcible movement of peoples from their homelands into new regions - common
element in all forms of diaspora - these are people who live outside their natal (or imagined natal)
territories and recognize that their traditional homelands are reflected deeply in the languages they
speak, religions they adopt, and the cultures they produce.

                                               Discrimination
The unequal treatment of members of various groups based on race, gender, social class, sexual
orientation, physical ability, religion and other categories. (Institute for Democratic Renewal and Project
Change AntiRacism Initiative. A Community Builder’s Tool Kit.)

In the United States, the law makes it illegal to discriminate against someone on the basis of race,
color, religion, national origin, or sex. The law also makes it illegal to retaliate against a person because
the person complained about discrimination, filed a charge of discrimination, or participated in an
employment discrimination investigation or lawsuit. The law also requires that employers reasonably
accommodate applicants’ and employees’ sincerely held religious practices, unless doing so would impose
an undue hardship on the operation of the employer’s business.

                                                   Diversity
Each individual is unique, and groups of individuals reflect multiple dimensions of difference including:
race, ethnicity, gender, class, sexual orientation, age, physical abilities, religious beliefs, political beliefs,
cognitive styles, and much more. Valuing diversity means embracing and celebrating the rich dimensions
of difference that exist in groups. (Adapted from Diversity Initiatives Campaign, The Diversity Project)
Diversity includes all the ways in which people differ, and it encompasses all the different characteristics
that make one individual or group different from another. It is all-inclusive and recognizes everyone and
every group as part of the diversity that should be valued. A broad definition includes not only race,
ethnicity, and gender—the groups that most often come to mind when the term “diversity” is used—but
also age, national origin, religion, disability, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, education, marital
status, language, and physical appearance. It also involves different ideas, perspectives, and values.

                                                     Equity
All groups have access to the resources and opportunities necessary to eliminate opportunity and
resource gaps, and thereby, improve the quality of their lives. (Adapted from Equity and Inclusion
Campaign)
Grantmakers in the Arts Racial Equity in Arts Funding Workshop
Ethnicity
A social construct that divides people into smaller social groups based on characteristics such as shared
sense of group membership, values, behavioral patterns, language, political and economic interests,
history, and ancestral geographical base. Examples of different ethnic groups are: Cape Verdean,
Haitian, African American (Black); Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese (Asian); Cherokee, Mohawk, Navaho
(Native American); Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican (Latino); Polish, Irish, and Swedish (White).

                                               Implicit Bias
Also known as unconscious or hidden bias, implicit biases are negative associations that people
unknowingly hold. They are expressed automatically, without conscious awareness. Many studies
have indicated that implicit biases affect individuals’ attitudes and actions, thus creating real-world
implications, even though individuals may not even be aware that those biases exist within themselves.
Notably, implicit biases have been shown to trump individuals’ stated commitments to equality and
fairness, thereby producing behavior that diverges from the explicit attitudes that many people profess.

The Implicit Association Test (IAT) is often used to measure implicit biases with regard to race, gender,
sexual orientation, age, religion, and other topics.

                                                 Inclusion
A value and practice of ensuring that people feel they belong and that their input is valued by the
whole (group, organization, society, system, etc.), particularly regarding decisions that affect their lives.
(Adapted from Equity and Inclusion Campaign)

Authentically bringing traditionally excluded individuals and/or groups into processes, activities, and
decision/policy making in a way that shares power.

                                                Indigeneity
Indigenous populations are composed of the existing descendants of the peoples who inhabited the
present territory of a country wholly or partially at the time when persons of a different culture or ethnic
origin arrived there from other parts of the world, overcame them, by conquest, settlement or other
means, and reduced them to a non-dominant or colonial condition; who today live more in conformity
with their particular social, economic and cultural customs and traditions than with the institutions of
the country of which they now form part, under a state structure which incorporates mainly national,
social and cultural characteristics of other segments of the population which are predominant. Example:
Maori in territory now defined as New Zealand; Mexicans in territory now defined as Texas, California,
New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, Nevada and parts of Colorado, Wyoming, Kansas, and Oklahoma; Native
American tribes in territory now defined as the United States.

                                            Individual Racism
Individual racism refers to the beliefs, attitudes, and actions of individuals that support or perpetuate
racism. Individual racism can be deliberate, or the individual may act to perpetuate or support racism
without knowing that is what he or she is doing.

Examples:

 •   Telling a racist joke, using a racial epithet, or believing in the inherent superiority of whites
     over other groups;
 •   Avoiding people of color whom you do not know personally, but not whites whom you do not
     know personally (e.g., white people crossing the street to avoid a group of Latino/a young people;
locking their doors when they see African American families sitting on their doorsteps in a city
     neighborhood; or not hiring a person of color because “something doesn’t feel right”); and
 •   Accepting things as they are (a form of collusion).

                                         Institutional Racism
Institutional racism refers specifically to the ways in which institutional policies and practices create
different outcomes for different racial groups. The institutional policies may never mention any racial
group, but their effect is to create advantages for whites and oppression and disadvantage for people
from groups classified as people of color.

Examples:

 •   Government policies that explicitly restricted the ability of people to get loans to buy or
     improve their homes in neighborhoods with high concentrations of African Americans
     (also known as “red-lining”).
 •   City sanitation department policies that concentrate trash transfer stations and
     other environmental hazards disproportionately in communities of color.

                                       Internalized Oppression
“A system of disadvantage [that includes people who are the targets of oppression internalizing]…a set
of develop ideas, beliefs, actions and behaviors that support or collude with [oppression and in which]…
individuals, institutions and communities … are often unconsciously and habitually rewarded for
supporting … privilege and power and punished and excluded when [they] do not.”

                                          Internalized Racism
Internalized racism is the situation that occurs in a racist system when a racial group oppressed by racism
supports the supremacy and dominance of the dominating group by maintaining or participating in the
set of attitudes, behaviors, social structures and ideologies that undergird the dominating group’s power.
It involves four essential and interconnected elements:

 •   Decision-making: Due to racism, people of color do not have the ultimate decision-making power
     over the decisions that control their lives or resources. On a personal level, we may think white
     people know more about what needs to be done for us than we do. On an interpersonal level, we
     may not support each other’s authority or power, especially if it is in opposition to the dominating
     racial group. Structurally, there is a system in place that rewards people of color who support white
     supremacy and power and coerces or punishes those who do not.
 •   Resources: Resources, broadly defined (e.g. money, time, etc.), are unequally in the hands and
     under the control of white people. Internalized racism is the system in place that makes it difficult
     for people of color to get access to resources for our own communities and to control the resources
     of our community. We learn to believe that serving and using resources for ourselves and our
     particular community is not serving “everybody.”
 •   Standards: With internalized racism, the standards for what is appropriate or “normal” that
     people of color accept are white people’s or Eurocentric standards. We have difficulty naming,
     communicating, and living up to our deepest standards and values, and holding ourselves and each
     other accountable to them.
 •   Naming the problem: There is a system in place that misnames the problem of racism as a problem
     of or caused by people of color and blames the disease— emotional, economic, political, etc.—on
     people of color. With internalized racism, people of color might, for example, believe we are more
     violent than white people and not consider state sanctioned political violence or the hidden or
     privatized violence of white people and the systems they put in place and support.
Interpersonal Racism
Interpersonal racism occurs between individuals. Once we bring our private beliefs into our interaction
with others, racism is now in the interpersonal realm. Examples: public expressions of racial prejudice,
hate, bias and bigotry between individuals.

                                    Interpersonal White Privilege
Behavior between people that consciously or unconsciously reflects white superiority or entitlement.

                                            Intersectionality
An approach largely advanced by women of color, arguing that classifications such as gender, race, class,
and others cannot be examined in isolation from one another; they interact and intersect in individuals’
lives, in society, in social systems, and are mutually constitutive. Exposing [one’s] multiple identities can
help clarify they ways in which a person can simultaneously experience privilege and oppression. For
example, a Black woman in America does not experience gender inequalities in exactly the same way
as a white woman, nor racial oppression identical to that experienced by a Black man. Each race and
gender intersection produce a qualitatively distinct life.

                                     Institutional White Privilege
Policies, practices, and behaviors of institutions— such as schools, banks, non-profits or the Supreme
Court—that have the effect of maintaining or increasing accumulated advantages for those groups
currently defined as white, and maintaining or increasing disadvantages for those racial or ethnic groups
not defined as white. The ability of institutions to survive and thrive even when their policies, practices,
and behaviors maintain, expand, or fail to redress accumulated disadvantages and/or inequitable
outcomes for people of color.

                                          Movement Building
is the effort of social change agents to engage power holders and the broader society in addressing
a systemic problem or injustice while promoting an alternative vision or solution. Movement building
requires a range of intersecting approaches through a set of distinct stages over a long-term period of
time. Through movement building, organizers can:

 •   Propose solutions to the root causes of social problems;
 •   Enable people to exercise their collective power;
 •   Humanize groups that have been denied basic human rights and improve conditions for the
     groups affected;
 •   Create structural change by building something larger than a particular organization
     or campaign; and
 •   Promote visions and values for society based on fairness, justice and democracy.

                                      Multicultural Competency
A process of learning about and becoming allies with people from other cultures, thereby broadening
our own understanding and ability to participate in a multicultural process. The key element to
becoming more culturally competent is respect for the ways that others live in and organize the
world and an openness to learn from them.
Oppression
Systemic devaluing, undermining, marginalizing, and disadvantaging of certain social identities in
contrast to the privileged norm; when some people are denied something of value, while others
have ready access. The act of crushing or burdening by abuse of authority or power, or of burdening
spiritually or mentally.

                                            Pluralist Model
The existence of groups with different ethnic, religious, or political backgrounds within one society.
The policy or theory that minority groups within a society should maintain cultural differences but
share overall political and economic power.

                                                  Power
is the capacity of individuals or groups to bring about change by:

 •   influencing people – “I/we can persuade others (individuals or groups) to do or refrain from
     doing something.”
 •   affecting one’s environment – “I /we can manipulate, change or control our environment.”
 •   addressing personal or group needs – “I/we can ensure that our needs are met.”
 •   pursuing desires – “I/we can take steps to get what we want.”
 •   protecting interests – “I/we can make sure that we and what’s important to us are protected.”
 •   defining issues, set agendas, and expand or limit the scope of discussion – “I/we can determine
     what is discussed, how issues are framed, and what is on/off the table for discussion.”
 •   determining who can participate in decision making and how – “I/we can decide who will
     make decisions and whose input will be considered.”

Power is multi-dimensional and can be exercised by individuals, groups, organizations and systems.
Power is not a fixed asset that people possess. Rather, it is socially constructed, understood, and
legitimized through social relationships among individuals and groups of people. Neither inherently
negative nor positive power can be developed and exercised either as “power over” or as “power with”
others. It can be generated, redistributed, or shared. Power can be exercised in ways that affirm human
dignity, protect individuals, and groups from oppression, and support a just and sustainable distribution
of resources. Alternatively, power can be exercised in ways that undermine human dignity, oppress or
disenfranchise individuals and groups, and maintain unfair, unsustainable distributions of resources.
People and groups gain power through many sources, including:

 •   being in a legally or institutionally protected group or having legally defined rights;
 •   having a position or role that gives one authority or responsibility to do certain things;
 •   having expertise or technical knowledge;
 •   being able to influence people by having gained their respect or admiration;
 •   having the capacity (real or perceived) to coerce, punish or employ physical force or to decide
     who will be punished or hurt;
 •   having the capacity (real or perceived) to decide who is rewarded and how;
 •   having control over resources needed to meet one’s own/one’s communities’ needs or
     satisfy desires;
 •   have “moral authority” (need to describe this); or
 •   having the ability to decide how and for whose benefit public resources are used.
Power is unequally distributed globally and in U.S. society; some individuals or groups wield greater
power than others, thereby allowing them greater access and control over resources. Wealth, whiteness,
citizenship, patriarchy, heterosexism, and education are a few key social mechanisms through which
power operates.

Although power is often conceptualized as power over other individuals or groups, other variations are
power with (used in the context of building collective strength) and power within (which references an
individual’s internal strength). Learning to “see” and understand relations of power is vital to organizing
for progressive social change.

                                                 Prejudice
A pre-judgment or unjustifiable, and usually negative, attitude of one type of individual or groups
toward another group and its members. Such negative attitudes are typically based on unsupported
generalizations (or stereotypes) that deny the right of individual members of certain groups to be
recognized and treated as individuals with individual characteristics.

                                                 Privilege
Unearned social power accorded by the formal and informal institutions of society to ALL members of a
dominant group (e.g. white privilege, male privilege, etc.). Privilege is usually invisible to those who have
it because we’re taught not to see it, but nevertheless it puts them at an advantage over those who do
not have it.

                                                   Race
A socially constructed way of grouping people, based on skin color and other apparent physical
differences, which has no genetic or scientific basis. The concept of race was created and used to
justify social and economic oppression of blacks and other people of color by whites.

A political construction created to concentrate power with white people and legitimize dominance
over non-white people.

                                      Racial and Ethnic Identity
An individual’s awareness and experience of being a member of a racial and ethnic group; the racial and
ethnic categories that an individual chooses to describe him or herself based on such factors as biological
heritage, physical appearance, cultural affiliation, early socialization, and personal experience.

                                              Racial Equity
Racial equity is the condition that would be achieved if one’s racial identity no longer predicted, in
a statistical sense, how one fares. When we use the term, we are thinking about racial equity as one
part of racial justice, and thus we also include work to address root causes of inequities not just their
manifestation. This includes elimination of policies, practices, attitudes and cultural messages that
reinforce differential outcomes by race or fail to eliminate them.

                                              Racial Justice
[is defined] as the proactive reinforcement of policies, practices, attitudes, and actions that produce
equitable power, access, opportunities, treatment, impacts, and outcomes for all.
Racial Identity Development Theory
Racial Identity Development Theory discusses how people in various racial groups and with multiracial
identities form their particular self-concept. It also describes some typical phases in remaking that
identity based on learning and awareness of systems of privilege and structural racism, cultural and
historical meanings attached to racial categories, and factors operating in the larger socio-historical level
(e.g. globalization, technology, immigration, and increasing multiracial population).

                                              Racial Healing
To restore to health or soundness; to repair or set right; to restore to spiritual wholeness.

                                          Racial Reconciliation
Reconciliation involves three ideas. First, it recognizes that racism in America is both systemic and
institutionalized, with far–reaching effects on both political engagement and economic opportunities for
minorities. Second, reconciliation is engendered by empowering local communities through relationship-
building and truth–telling. Lastly, justice is the essential component of the conciliatory process—justice
that is best termed as restorative rather than retributive, while still maintaining its vital punitive
character.

                                                  Racism
For purposes of this site, we want users to know we are using the term “racism” specifically to refer to
individual, cultural, institutional, and systemic ways by which differential consequences are created for
groups historically or currently defined as white being advantaged, and groups historically or currently
defined as non-white (African, Asian, Hispanic, Native American, etc.) as disadvantaged. That idea
aligns with those who define racism as prejudice plus power—a common phrase in the field. Combining
the concepts of prejudice and power points out the mechanisms by which racism leads to different
consequences for different groups. The relationship and behavior of these interdependent elements
has allowed racism to recreate itself generation after generation, such that systems that perpetuate
racial inequity no longer need racist actors or to explicitly promote racial differences in opportunities,
outcomes and consequences to maintain those differences. A form of oppression based on the socially
constructed concept of race* exercised by the dominant racial group (whites) over non-dominant racial
groups.

Racism operates on four levels: (Source: Applied Research Center)

 1. Internalized Racism is the set of private beliefs, prejudices, and ideas that individuals have about
    the superiority of whites and the inferiority of people of color. Among people of color, it manifests
    as internalized oppression. Among whites, it manifests as internalized racial superiority.

 2. Interpersonal Racism is the expression of racism between individuals.

 3. Institutional Racism is discriminatory treatment, unfair policies and practices, inequitable
    opportunities and impacts within organizations and institutions, based on race.

 4. Structural Racism is a system in which public policies, institutional practices, cultural
    representations, and other norms work in various, often reinforcing ways to perpetuate
    racial group inequality.

*Race: A socially constructed way of grouping people, based on skin color and other apparent physical
differences, which has no genetic or scientific basis. The concept of race was created and used to justify
social and economic oppression of blacks and other people of color by whites. (Adapted from “Race:
The Power of an Illusion”)
Racial Justice
the creation and proactive reinforcement of policies, practices, attitudes and actions that produce
equitable power, access, opportunities, treatment, and outcomes for all people, regardless of race.
(Applied Research Center)

                                               Racial Equity
a situation where one cannot predict an individual or group’s access to resources or likelihood of
well-being and social status based on their race.

                                       Structural White Privilege
A system of white domination that creates and maintains belief systems that make current racial
advantages and disadvantages seem normal. The system includes powerful incentives for maintaining
white privilege and its consequences, and powerful negative consequences for trying to interrupt
white privilege or reduce its consequences in meaningful ways. The system includes internal and
external manifestations at the individual, interpersonal, cultural and institutional levels.

The accumulated and interrelated advantages and disadvantages of white privilege that are reflected
in racial/ethnic inequities in life- expectancy and other health outcomes, income and wealth and
other outcomes, in part through different access to opportunities and resources. These differences
are maintained in part by denying that these advantages and disadvantages exist at the structural,
institutional, cultural, interpersonal and individual levels and by refusing to redress them or eliminate
the systems, policies, practices, cultural norms and other behaviors and assumptions that maintain them.

                                           Unearned Privilege
Systematic advantage that is granted based on race, gender, socioeconomic status, sexual orientation,
or other dimensions of diversity, regardless of individuals’ personal characteristics or efforts. This creates
dominant/“up” and non-dominant/“down” groups in a society. These advantages are real and exist
whether or not a person from a privileged group makes a conscious, deliberate choice to seek or
act on the privileges or whether the person is even aware that s/he benefits from such systematic,
structural advantages.

                                              White Privilege

Refers to the unquestioned and unearned set of advantages, entitlements, benefits and choices
bestowed on people solely because they are white. Generally, white people who experience such
privilege do so without being conscious of it.

                                            White Supremacy

White supremacy is a historically based, institutionally perpetuated system of exploitation and
oppression of continents, nations, and peoples of color by white peoples and nations of the European
continent for the purpose of maintaining and defending a system of wealth, power and privilege.

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